Hey guys,I have a question regarding the movement of a mini marker by uncontrollable forces. Lets say my shot lands on the side of a hill or some slight incline with loose sand or leaves. I place my marker and proceed to put my foot behind the marker. As I step behind the marker my foot causes some of the loose sand or leaves to move the marker down the side of the hill. Is there a penalty for this? Do I just stand where I have planted my foot and throw from there? Or can I move my foot to the new lie that my marker has slid to?I have this happen to me a lot and my buddies and I were talking about it and what would happen in a tournament. We did not know. Thanks.

Because I haven't said it lately, Chuck, thanks so much for visiting here with your encompassing knowledge of rules and fair play. While we can all go to a book and look something up, sometimes you just don't know what to think for sure and you've consistently helped set people on the path to consistent fair play. Thank a bunch!

Almost every course I have played at has such tall grass/overall vegetation, that it's often impossible to just place the marker on the ground so that it'll just lie there neatly. It's almost always dangling and will move when you put your foot behind it.

Parks wrote:If the posts on this forum are any indication, the PD is like a Teebird with sunshine coming out of its butthole so hard that it flies faster.

jubuttib wrote:Almost every course I have played at has such tall grass/overall vegetation, that it's often impossible to just place the marker on the ground so that it'll just lie there neatly. It's almost always dangling and will move when you put your foot behind it.

Something I've seen plenty of people do that alleviates that problem is to take the disc you're picking up after marking and place it covering the front half of the mini so that the weight holds it in place.

jubuttib wrote:Almost every course I have played at has such tall grass/overall vegetation, that it's often impossible to just place the marker on the ground so that it'll just lie there neatly. It's almost always dangling and will move when you put your foot behind it.

Something I've seen plenty of people do that alleviates that problem is to take the disc you're picking up after marking and place it covering the front half of the mini so that the weight holds it in place.

If you're going that way, I'd just rather use the disc I'm picking up as the marker. =)

Parks wrote:If the posts on this forum are any indication, the PD is like a Teebird with sunshine coming out of its butthole so hard that it flies faster.